Yes, absolutely.
I would say that the issues associated with grain drying and building heating are two separate things, with technology at different states of readiness. We know how to heat and insulate buildings in a manner that reduces emissions significantly, and I've demonstrated that personally by retrofitting our farmhouse and reducing the energy consumption there by 83%. We made the decision to disconnect from our fossil fuel gas connection.
What farmers really need, though, is assistance to retrofit their barns and improvements to the building codes to require high-performance insulation and ventilation with heat recovery. The technology is ready now, but it is not normalized for livestock facilities. It is probably only becoming mainstream in residential and commercial construction as we speak.
With respect to grain drying, though, the technology is in a state of maturing. We can provide a heat source with heat pumps, but the problem is that grain drying is an intermittent need and it takes a very high energy demand. If we were to decarbonize the electrical grid, I see it being very possible to use a heat pump to provide that heat source to supplement the air as you're drying your grain. It's just a matter of the technology needing to mature.